“THE only newspaper allowed in our house is the Morning Star,” Laura Alvarez said to cheers at the Matchwomen’s Festival in Bow, east London, on Saturday night.
Jeremy Corbyn’s wife was speaking in the first joint interview the pair have ever given, and described how hostile media began spreading dirt on her as early as 2015, the year Mr Corbyn won the Labour leadership, with articles lying about her coffee import business as a means to attack him.
“It’s important we build our own narrative, because I don’t trust the mainstream media. I have good friends and I ask, why do you read the Guardian? And they say, ‘it has some good articles.’ But for every good article there are 10 nasty articles that misrepresent everything!”
BERNADETTE KEAVENEY announces a simplified and streamlined way to get your paper delivered daily, and a big push for new readers that we can all help make into a success
At the very moment Britain faces poverty, housing and climate crises requiring radical solutions, the liberal press promotes ideologically narrow books while marginalising authors who offer the most accurate understanding of change, writes IAN SINCLAIR
BEN CHACKO reports on the struggles against sexism, racism and the brutish British state that featured at Matchwomen’s Festival this year
The Morning Star invites readers to join Jeremy Corbyn and others to celebrate a working-class female victory that echoes through the ages



